Sweet restaurants in India
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A
New Kulfi Centre
Serves the best kulfi (firm-textured ice cream flavoured, often with pistachio) you’ll have anywhere, which means it’s the best-tasting thing in the entire world. When you order, the kulfi is placed on a betel-nut leaf and then weighed on an ancient scale – which makes it even better.
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B
Janta Sweets
The 'home of sweets' comes pretty close to the money, with superb mawa ladoo and mawa katchori, and a high customer turnover.
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C
Neha Snacks
Locals flock to this Punjabi place for pure-veg snacks like channa puri (chickpea curry with bread) and Indian sweets.
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D
Green House
The Green House is the casual front restaurant at the House of MG. Choose the fan-blasted outdoor courtyard or the AC room with a big-screen TV. The selection of Gujarati dishes is superb. Do try the house special sharbat; and the delicate and delicious panki, a thin crepe cooked between banana leaves; or the divine malpura, a sweet, deep-fried pancake in saffron syrup, topped with rose petals. And don’t leave without trying the hand-churned ice cream.
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E
Agra Sweets
This sweet shop, opposite Sojati Gate, sells good lassis, as well as delectable Jodhpur specialities such as mawa ladoo (a milk sweet made with sugar, cardamom and pistachios, wrapped in silver leaf) and the baklava-like mawa kachori.
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F
Ghantewala
Delhi’s most famous sweetery, ‘the bell ringer’ has been churning out mithai (Indian sweets) since 1790. Try some sohan halwa (ghee-dipped gram flour biscuits).
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Manali Sweets
Manali’s favourite dhaba, serving Indian sticky sweets, hot chai , samosas and hot veg snacks from early morning to late at night.
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G
KC Das
This historic, if not especially atmospheric, Bengali sweet shop invented rasgulla (syrupy sponge balls) in 1868. Seating available.
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H
Kanji
Across the road from Rawat Kachori, with a fabulous array of great Indian sweets is Kanji .
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Jarokha/Gupta Brothers
A wooden spiral stairway leads up to a haveli-style vegetarian dining room above this celebrated Bengali sweet shop.
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I
Jalebiwala
Calories schmalories! Century-old Jalebiwala does Delhi’s – if not India’s – finest jalebis (deep-fried ‘squiggles’), so pig out and worry about your waistline tomorrow. Luring everyone from taxi-wallahs to Bollywood stars, you’ll quickly see what all the fuss is about once you’ve taken your first crunchy-yet-oh-so-syrupy bite.
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J
Chhotu Motu Joshi Sweet Shop
Bikaner’s most-loved sweet stop has an assortment of Indian treats. Try the milk sweet rasmalai (cottage cheese dumplings; Rs16) and saffron kesar cham cham (milk, sugar and saffron-flavoured sweet; Rs6).
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K
Bhang Shop
Lassis, bhang cookies, cakes and sweets are sold here; camel safari packs are a speciality. Bhang can be deceptively strong and does not agree with everyone.
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